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May 20, 2026
This week’s themeToponyms This week’s words laconism Smithfield match
The Marriage Settlement, 1743
The first of a series of six paintings Marriage A-la-Mode Art: William Hogarth Wordsmith Games
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu GargSmithfield match
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: A marriage of convenience, especially one arranged for money.
ETYMOLOGY:
After Smithfield, London, long associated with markets and fairs,
including Bartholomew Fair (1133-1855). Earliest documented use: 1703.
NOTES:
Smithfield, London, has long been known for its livestock and meat
markets, which seems right on the nose for a place that gave us a term
for a marriage of convenience. But that’s not how this sense of the word
started: Smithfield was also famous for fairs and bargains, especially
Bartholomew Fair, held there for hundreds of years. A Smithfield match was a match made not in heaven, but in the accounts ledger. The bride, groom, and cattle may all have been inspected with the same commercial squint. A near synonym is Smithfield bargain. USAGE:
“In such marriages, the prime negotiator was called a cattle-dealer ...
Bianca’s marriage also is a Smithfield match.” Barbara C. Hodgdon; Ghostly Fragments; University of Michigan Press; 2021. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Vocations which we wanted to pursue, but didn't, bleed, like colors, on the
whole of our existence. -Honore de Balzac, novelist (20 May 1799-1850)
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